New York City Mayor Rudy Guiliani. Barbara Olson. Todd Beamer and Linda
Gronlund of United Flight 93. Those and many others are the people that
you nominated as your Person of the Year. As worthy as they are, 56 per
cent of you believe that only person deserves to the nod.

Finally we have a leader! Need I say more?

How could this selection go to anyone else this year?

- comments from two nominators

It's almost a cliché given how often people say the words, but
it is true, you can only judge the true measure of a person by how they
respond in a crisis.

In
January 2001, I doubt many people - Republicans included - would have
been very confident about George W. Bush's ability to govern. Millions
of Americans refused to concede the legitimacy of his Administration despite
his early successes dealing with Congress and America's problems. It was
really only by the summer of this year that Americans truly began to accept
Bush for the man they hoped he was. After eight years of scandal and prevarication,
a man sat in the Oval Office who was plain spoken, did what he promised
and lived his life the way many Americans do.

The world changed on September 11 and with it, different standards were
established for a president. Not since John F. Kennedy's Cuban Missile
Crisis and Franklin D. Roosevelt's response to the attack at Pearl Harbor
was a president placed in the position that Bush was in. A morning that
began for him in a Florida grade school classroom ended with a desperate
need to unite the American people into a common purpose.

Contrary to what many pundits wrote this year, September 11 didn't change
George W. Bush and nor did he mature in office. The former party boy who
admitted he had been alcoholic and dogged by rumors of 1970s drug use,
Bush confronted his demons a long time ago and made himself into the man
he is long before Osama bin Laden hatched a plot to murder as many people
as possible in attacks using airliners. Many observers saw in Bush a peace
of mind that comes from people whom, to use the language of Alcoholics
Anonymous, achieve serenity by accepting the things that they can't change.

It was that peace of mind mixed with a determination for justice that
has, at least in this journal's opinion, powered Bush since those attacks.
It was on display the night that Bush climbed atop a pile of rubble at
the site of the World Trade Center three days after the attack and truly
became America's president. As he stood and spoke on that pile of rubble
in Manhattan, some people in the crowd shouted they couldn't hear him.

"I can hear you. The rest of the world hears you. And the people
who knocked these buildings down will hear all of us soon," Bush
answered. With the crowd responding with a chant of "USA, USA,"
it would have been impossible to believe that George W. Bush was anything
less America's leader, something that many would have argued not nine
months before.

It's early yet in Bush's presidency considering that early January marks
only his first year in office, so it's hard to predict what kind of presidency
Americans can expect over the coming years. Doubtless, he will make moves
that conservatives won't like. A Congress determined to limit his impact
as much as possible before 2004 may blunt his agenda. He may falter and
make a serious mistake. An American public may forget the feelings they
had when they saw their president surrounded by their heroes chanting
their nation's name.

Despite that, in the words of the nominator quoted at the beginning of
this citation, how could this selection go to anyone else this year?